85 Minn. 272 | Minn. | 1902
Action for personal injuries sustained by an employee while at work for defendant in the construction of a bridge over the Shell river. While turning a jackscrew by means of a defective crowbar, it broke, whereby he was injured. The answer is a general denial. Plaintiff recovered a verdict. A new trial was denied. Defendant appeals.
From the evidence, which the verdict requires us to adopt, it substantially appears that plaintiff, a young man thirty years old, was required in his service to work on a scaffolding eighteen feet above the ice in the bed of the Shell river, and to stand on a plank twelve inches wide to assist in the turning of a jackscrew placed on such plank in order to raise one end of the bridge. He usually worked with the foreman of the bridge crew, and on the occasion when he was injured took from a tool box where the tools used in
It is unnecessary to cite authorities to support the very elementary legal questions involved on this appeal. There is no doubt whatever that it is the duty of the master to furnish reasonably safe instrumentalities for the use of his servants in the performance of their duties in his service; also to exercise ordinary care to keep them in that condition. There was evidence reasonably tending to show that the crowbar had been used in the same work plaintiff was performing for some time; that he, as well as others, had so used the same for that purpose; that it was at the end of each day placed with other tools in a tool box, and each morning taken therefrom for such use; that plaintiff was performing his duties in the usual way, when he was, by the fact of the breakage, thrown to the bed of the river below. There was also evidence tending to show that four or five days before the accident the crowbar was injured during a fire in defendant’s coal sheds by pouring upon it, while heated, large quantities of water. The injurious effect of the application of water to heated steel by weakening its strength was shown by competent evidence of qualified witnesses to support plaintiff’s claim in that respect, and' it would seem to us quite probable, even from common knowledge applied to the facts, that such a result would follow, and the jury might be justified in the conclusion that the crowbar was defective after the fire, even if of good quality when furnished. This evidence, taken in connection with the effect of the application of the slight force shown to have been applied in attempting to move the screw by it when it broke, might well furnish grounds to support the conclusion that a reasonable inspection -would have discovered its condition.
Order affirmed.